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Mar 2, 2013
03/13
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so good governance, go get it. it is crucial, it is crucial. i really like the perspective, the average age of prostitution in this country is 12. and all of them are survivors of spousal abuse. we have to start disrupting that immediately. we talked about this kind of stuff a lot, nobody -- was just the way things were. a lot of love in our family. i lived alone for two years growing up in two different states. i live in a rural hot house in tennessee by myself. i realize that is not working so well so i need to go somewhere else and i jumped from the frying pan into the fire. we have a wonderful relationship. and he left the states. no one ever noticed. not a guidance counselor, not a teacher. one neighbor reached out to me, she said there's something going on. i thought she was rich because she had cinemax. she listened to me after school. it is about recognition. it is about voice. it is about victor centric policies and ultimately about empowerment and gender equality. that does include eliminating racism and all of its iterations. >> all
so good governance, go get it. it is crucial, it is crucial. i really like the perspective, the average age of prostitution in this country is 12. and all of them are survivors of spousal abuse. we have to start disrupting that immediately. we talked about this kind of stuff a lot, nobody -- was just the way things were. a lot of love in our family. i lived alone for two years growing up in two different states. i live in a rural hot house in tennessee by myself. i realize that is not working...
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Nov 4, 2013
11/13
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determination that is right of indigenous people to control their own destiny to self-government in the and digit this institution and through setting policy over the indigenously and in territories a and habitats to protect the culture in the broadest sense of the word but it does not extend to succession for those nations to recognize human rights. it is consummate with the inherent tribal sovereignty principles under the framework with domestic dependent nations with sovereignty over their of millions to exercise under the protection of a strong third nation. with that i want to stake all of you i hope the great spirit is at your side with your endeavors and thank you very much. [applause] >> in to think the center for the committees that vendor built for sponsoring this talk today ian to sponsoring a series of sessions taking place today and tomorrow with the pitfalls of modern medicine id we have some some pamphlets appeared feel free to come and take one. i will introduce dr. victoria sweet and associate professor at the river's did california's santa cisco a prize-winning histori
determination that is right of indigenous people to control their own destiny to self-government in the and digit this institution and through setting policy over the indigenously and in territories a and habitats to protect the culture in the broadest sense of the word but it does not extend to succession for those nations to recognize human rights. it is consummate with the inherent tribal sovereignty principles under the framework with domestic dependent nations with sovereignty over their...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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this is out inefficient government is. finally the air force canceled the spent another 100 million first. they paid the settlement fee to cancel of $8 million. but the person responsible did not get fired and not held accountable. those that did not provide the service got their money back. nobody runs their household that way. most state governments operate the we are incompetent when it comes to spending america is taxpayer money would raise $32 billion for year on programs that don't work? that is 60% of what they want to take additional lay out of the pentagon. where does the leadership say we will stop? to have a special subcommittee with the bad actors and we demand those people get fired but none of that happens. you could not perform on a contract and do it with impunity because members of congress are basically not willing or inexperienced to know you should hold people accountable whether a federal employee but that is one example just this week. >> host: what was the business you built? >> guest: my father star
this is out inefficient government is. finally the air force canceled the spent another 100 million first. they paid the settlement fee to cancel of $8 million. but the person responsible did not get fired and not held accountable. those that did not provide the service got their money back. nobody runs their household that way. most state governments operate the we are incompetent when it comes to spending america is taxpayer money would raise $32 billion for year on programs that don't work?...
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Nov 18, 2013
11/13
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standing out to someone and standing up to the government can sometimes be its own reward when your client does that have anyone to stand up for them and doesn't have any other support against them, the police are against them, just sort of a metal being someone's advocate is priceless. winning is a great. when you run a trial it is a great experience. there is no greater feeling. >> hearing not guilty or every defense attorneys favorite thing. >> some of the problems people have, the clients have oftentimes there's not even their family there in the courtroom with them because all of the socioeconomic issues the would be there to support them that would bring out the point that what we need is some form of moniker muddle intervention. >> if we could focus on some of the resources that we focus in the criminal justice system elsewhere we would save money. >> it's interesting to me that one of the comments in the book we can all kind of get up on our soap box and talk about the - incarceration but in some ways that is a motivation for some people during this work. what i really like about t
standing out to someone and standing up to the government can sometimes be its own reward when your client does that have anyone to stand up for them and doesn't have any other support against them, the police are against them, just sort of a metal being someone's advocate is priceless. winning is a great. when you run a trial it is a great experience. there is no greater feeling. >> hearing not guilty or every defense attorneys favorite thing. >> some of the problems people have,...
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Jul 28, 2013
07/13
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she's doing is these camps -- this dance, this dance between using, you know, not a ceiling of the government in refugee apology, in my day. but she's making it very painfully clear on the ground where she stands. and she has a frank made. that's like a dog tag with her signature on. she has a frank made but she gives it to people in europe who are trying to buy people's freedom. and i just wish she had been more public about that, but that is irrational a leap of the want her to be a demagogue. in a, but that doesn't mean that i'm not disappointed by it. does that make sense? thank you all very much. [applause] >> [inaudible conversations] >> that concludes our coverage of the 2013 roosevelt reading. >> you're watching the tv on c-span2. but here's the primetime lineup for tonight. >> here's a look at some books that are being published this week. look for the sides and bookstores this coming week, and watch for the authors in the near future on booktv and on booktv.org. >> now from the 2013 harlem book fair, a discussion about science and health. this is about an hour and 15 minutes. >> so,
she's doing is these camps -- this dance, this dance between using, you know, not a ceiling of the government in refugee apology, in my day. but she's making it very painfully clear on the ground where she stands. and she has a frank made. that's like a dog tag with her signature on. she has a frank made but she gives it to people in europe who are trying to buy people's freedom. and i just wish she had been more public about that, but that is irrational a leap of the want her to be a...
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Jun 23, 2013
06/13
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we are overturning the government and to occupy the suez canal. he was out in the middle east at the request of the general assembly and security council. in the meanwhile, while he was out there, these powers were conspiring, the three powers were conspiring to overturn us any most reckless way. it is staffed by many nations and could intervene between the combatants in this case and keep the peace. he drew this in his career. the author was a very brilliant canadian, lester pearson. he worked very closely with dag hammarskjold when pearson received a nobel prize with the execution of peacekeeping. and he really gave all of the credit to dag hammarskjold. it is a very interesting story. brian burkhardt was the muscle. he was a brilliant african-american noble laureate who is one of the inner circle of dag hammarskjold. so that is what you are looking at trade it is hammarskjold being a peaceful man with no military experience. no military experience prior to this, he did this many times. strange enough to say, his advisor, his military advisor sa
we are overturning the government and to occupy the suez canal. he was out in the middle east at the request of the general assembly and security council. in the meanwhile, while he was out there, these powers were conspiring, the three powers were conspiring to overturn us any most reckless way. it is staffed by many nations and could intervene between the combatants in this case and keep the peace. he drew this in his career. the author was a very brilliant canadian, lester pearson. he worked...
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Jul 7, 2013
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howard is prioritized by government. so again, mission was to talk about -- the opening of the dollar, the real afghanistan, the peace to afghanistan. after 1990 had its share of peace and prosperity. my mother calls it prosperity. it did not really developed, was elected. go back to that environment where was one of the most peaceful spots around the world. in my have green, we were tourists from all over the world were coming to enjoy afghanistan . i as a tour guide would take them where it would be considered a gift of that village. by the way, a country where killing of a person to my every village around afghanistan, that is what they tell people about. we did. our father would tell us. a prayer. oh, somebody has been killed. we will go to there. that is a rear talk about. i want to talk to people about the fact that afghanistan was never our corrupt nation. it is not okay -- the college a corrupt nation today, but corruption. especially in the last 13 of 14 years. when people integrated and went to a neighboring co
howard is prioritized by government. so again, mission was to talk about -- the opening of the dollar, the real afghanistan, the peace to afghanistan. after 1990 had its share of peace and prosperity. my mother calls it prosperity. it did not really developed, was elected. go back to that environment where was one of the most peaceful spots around the world. in my have green, we were tourists from all over the world were coming to enjoy afghanistan . i as a tour guide would take them where it...
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May 5, 2013
05/13
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in government, i often saw the following. people who are designing rules involving in ireland for paramount's or forms for taxes or something else, who would produce the forms and complete good faith, thinking they would be manageable by people and they were surprised the thing turned out to be hard to navigate. it's a little like if you go to a town that's not familiar to you and you ask, where's the gas duchenne? in a sea turn left, turn right, go two miles and will be a red noted on the right, you can't miss it and i at least always miss it. people in government are sometimes like it. the local who is not helping you typically is that mischievous or cruel. they're not trying to get you lost, but they are not attuned to the fact you are not familiar with the context and the way they are. something to say about default rules in a little bit. what i want to emphasize now is if you think of yourself on, mortgage, rental car you get for a vacation, relationship you have with multiple people you are contracting with, there are d
in government, i often saw the following. people who are designing rules involving in ireland for paramount's or forms for taxes or something else, who would produce the forms and complete good faith, thinking they would be manageable by people and they were surprised the thing turned out to be hard to navigate. it's a little like if you go to a town that's not familiar to you and you ask, where's the gas duchenne? in a sea turn left, turn right, go two miles and will be a red noted on the...
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Mar 3, 2013
03/13
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government as a platform. not a scarce model where we are delivering services but a framework of abundance. real active citizen engagement. that is my case and that is my argument and i am grateful that you all took the time to be here >> thank you all. [applause] [applause] a few days before they been in california gavin newsome attended a party to celebrate the publication of his book. otb followed him as he greeted attendees. see its john cole. >> nice to see you. >> is what is the title? >> dedicated friend and adviser. >> dedicated friend and advisor. >> i can say what he does. >> no one knows. >> they know. [laughter] that's so funny. >> now i really want to find out. >> john is a dedicated friend and adviser to many of in the democratic party and many other friends. he is a friend that you want on your side. if you don't need fingerprints, i can say that right? >> i want to ask you a question. i am a ravens fan. >> why are you rubbing it in? [laughter] for passing plays? >> this has nothing to do with t
government as a platform. not a scarce model where we are delivering services but a framework of abundance. real active citizen engagement. that is my case and that is my argument and i am grateful that you all took the time to be here >> thank you all. [applause] [applause] a few days before they been in california gavin newsome attended a party to celebrate the publication of his book. otb followed him as he greeted attendees. see its john cole. >> nice to see you. >> is...
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Nov 17, 2013
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[laughter] so the lesson of that was if we make that case as we try to do in the book for a limited government we will win every time but the centerpiece was obamacare but it is hard when you choose your nominee something that is similar and paralleled in tribute to romney he was proud of that achievement as a way to get ahead politically. . . >> the man is enjoying his life. let's not wreck it. laugh so. >> last question. >> thank you for your time tonight. my question is regarding an article that daniel hemminger wrote for the journal. maybe a month ago and he basically said that the strategy that republican should employ is to not attack obamacare and it would eventually fall under its own weight. this seems more realistic today than it did then and i was curious what you thought about that and personally i am skeptical because i've never seen entitlement taken away. he made that argument so i don't know if you are familiar with him but i thought you might have an opinion. >> actually i concur with him. entitlement to be taken away has to be instituted and it has to have some success in bei
[laughter] so the lesson of that was if we make that case as we try to do in the book for a limited government we will win every time but the centerpiece was obamacare but it is hard when you choose your nominee something that is similar and paralleled in tribute to romney he was proud of that achievement as a way to get ahead politically. . . >> the man is enjoying his life. let's not wreck it. laugh so. >> last question. >> thank you for your time tonight. my question is...
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Aug 19, 2013
08/13
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hopefully the government won't mind. or maybe we will have to go to mars or mercury. there are a lot right now. the thing is when we think about space travel and colonizing space it may turn out to take a little bit longer than we think. we are taking our first baby steps towards the space travel. but let me just give you a quick example how that time line might work. looking back into human history, humans 50,000 years ago used boats like these that you see over here to get from asia to australia. 50,000 years ago to cross an entire ocean. but there wasn't really until about 500 years ago you had international travel using boats creating a culture. it wasn't until the advent of tremendous sums of capital being poured into the shipping as part of the colonization of the plan at that you really got a global culture. so that is a kind of lag time before the first use of the boats to go from one continent to the other to creating a culture where humans are traveling all the time and content. so if you think of this first year as the rockets that we have used to get to th
hopefully the government won't mind. or maybe we will have to go to mars or mercury. there are a lot right now. the thing is when we think about space travel and colonizing space it may turn out to take a little bit longer than we think. we are taking our first baby steps towards the space travel. but let me just give you a quick example how that time line might work. looking back into human history, humans 50,000 years ago used boats like these that you see over here to get from asia to...
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Mar 3, 2013
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i believe that one form of government that still works well is local government. when you don't like the way that the world looks, stand on your head and go local. remarkable things happened. i am a big part of the city administrators and supervisors. and i remember that imagine what michael were to say if i came out with a democratic win in san francisco to clean up graffiti. he would say, what are you talking about. or his colleagues came out with a plan to sweep the streets. it just makes no sense at a local level. board of california politics, pragmatism at the local level. i have always said that ideologues make lousy mayors and the opposite is true. you have to get things done. one of the nice things is proximity has a little bit more legitimacy. a little bit more locally optimistic than state and federally. >> politicians make lousy mayors, but you are the opposite. [applause] >> thank you. >> i would like to thank you for these, by the way. we have to make real change like the tea party dead in a top-down approach sadly i would like to take its dissipated
i believe that one form of government that still works well is local government. when you don't like the way that the world looks, stand on your head and go local. remarkable things happened. i am a big part of the city administrators and supervisors. and i remember that imagine what michael were to say if i came out with a democratic win in san francisco to clean up graffiti. he would say, what are you talking about. or his colleagues came out with a plan to sweep the streets. it just makes no...
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Jul 13, 2013
07/13
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hopefully the government will mind. maybe will have to go to mars and mercury. a lot of jobs on mercury right now. it's like saskatchewan. come on. we will take any refugees. the thing is, when we think about space travel and colonizing space, it may turn out to take a little bit longer than we think. let me just give you a quick example of how that, my work. looking back into him minister, humans, 50,000 years ago used much like you're sitting over year to get from asia to australia. 50,000 years ago they crossed an entire ocean. it was not really until about 500 years ago that you have international travel using boats creating a global culture. it was not until really the advent of tremendous amounts of capital being poured into shipping as part of the colonization of the planet that you really got turned of, like harris said, global culture. so that's a lot of lag time between the first use of boats to go from one continent to the other to creating a culture where humans are traveling all the time between the continents. so if you think of this first year as
hopefully the government will mind. maybe will have to go to mars and mercury. a lot of jobs on mercury right now. it's like saskatchewan. come on. we will take any refugees. the thing is, when we think about space travel and colonizing space, it may turn out to take a little bit longer than we think. let me just give you a quick example of how that, my work. looking back into him minister, humans, 50,000 years ago used much like you're sitting over year to get from asia to australia. 50,000...
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Jul 27, 2013
07/13
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but meanwhile, the british government and occupy the suez canal. he was in the middle east. he invented shughts diplomacy. mr. kissinger did not. he was in the middle east at the ask of the general assembly and security counsel to establish something resimilarbling, if not peace, then at least the armist, the willingness not shoot at each other that had been put there some years earlier. and meanwhile, even while he was out there, the three power were conspiring to overturn him and occupy the suez canal in a most reckless way. so this was the origin of peace keeping forces. the notion that a u.n. peace keeping force staffed by many nations could intervene between the combatant in this case, and keep the peace was reestablished the peace grew out of this moment in his career. the author of the idea of peace keeping was very brilliant canadian diplomat leader lester peerson. he worked closely with him. when pierson received a nobel prize for the concept and execution of peace keeping, he really gave all the credit to him. where it was probably due. it's a very interesting stor
but meanwhile, the british government and occupy the suez canal. he was in the middle east. he invented shughts diplomacy. mr. kissinger did not. he was in the middle east at the ask of the general assembly and security counsel to establish something resimilarbling, if not peace, then at least the armist, the willingness not shoot at each other that had been put there some years earlier. and meanwhile, even while he was out there, the three power were conspiring to overturn him and occupy the...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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she encourages the study of foreign government, she encourages the study of different religions. you will never know what you believe eleanor's great teacher taught her unless you can argue with equal conviction the position that is assume bid your fearest critic. now i ask you if one-third of the people who live in the city that i worship, washington, d.c., or any capitol in any all fifty states embrace one tenth of that, how much progress would we make? let look at the scientific revolution. eleanor argues there's a constantly evolving science that will change the way that we live. that will make -- she wrote this in 1962, that will make 1984 look like a comic book. that until we learn to encourage scientific developments, foster new medical care, and in a way that will make that medical care assessable and affordable to all who need it, we will have failed science and science will have failed us. so she argues that we have an extraordinary history. and that we are beginning to face our shortcomings in our history. that race and ethnic prejudice and religious bias are the lead
she encourages the study of foreign government, she encourages the study of different religions. you will never know what you believe eleanor's great teacher taught her unless you can argue with equal conviction the position that is assume bid your fearest critic. now i ask you if one-third of the people who live in the city that i worship, washington, d.c., or any capitol in any all fifty states embrace one tenth of that, how much progress would we make? let look at the scientific revolution....
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May 25, 2013
05/13
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government. okay, no jargon. jargon-free zones. idea number six, this is a very unhappy high school senior trying to apply to colleges. and this is an unhappy high school senior, but my guess is that a very significant percentage of americans have in one or another way been struggling with applications whether it's for a small business loan or for a mortgage or for some benefit that the government entitles you to. when are applications easy? i referred to the financial aid form which has gotten much simpler, and i'll just tell you two bits of things that make it simpler. one is fewer questions. and another is in code on the form data that government already has so that high school seniors and their parents don't have to do it. and the key thing here is to ask a high school senior to produce a lot of tax information from their parents isn't the easiest thing to ask them to do. the parents might not have the stuff available, it might be a little awkward for the high school senior to see this stuff,
government. okay, no jargon. jargon-free zones. idea number six, this is a very unhappy high school senior trying to apply to colleges. and this is an unhappy high school senior, but my guess is that a very significant percentage of americans have in one or another way been struggling with applications whether it's for a small business loan or for a mortgage or for some benefit that the government entitles you to. when are applications easy? i referred to the financial aid form which has gotten...
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Oct 5, 2013
10/13
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so when they remove the constituents and refund the government and put the government open again, we could then ask to go to conference. this time they should say yes. they just have to not show up. sit in your desk and just not say anything, don't object, we'll go to conference. in the budget conference then, you put everything on the table. everything. you can talk about anything you want. you can talk about taxes, no taxes. you can talk about how much money you want to spend overall. and most importantly, you can decide how much revenue, how much tax. that is what the american people want, is a budget. we haven't had one for awhile. we need to get one. we've had spending limits, but we've not had a budget. spending limits, but we've not had a budget. let's get a budget. then those of us that are appropriators -- and i'm one of those in charge of how to try to build the homeland security budget -- the chairman then will give us the number that's agreed to by democrats and republicans. and they'll say to me and to senator coats you have "x" amount of money to spend. you've got lots
so when they remove the constituents and refund the government and put the government open again, we could then ask to go to conference. this time they should say yes. they just have to not show up. sit in your desk and just not say anything, don't object, we'll go to conference. in the budget conference then, you put everything on the table. everything. you can talk about anything you want. you can talk about taxes, no taxes. you can talk about how much money you want to spend overall. and...
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May 29, 2013
05/13
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we have work with the federal government. we have a program called securing the cities, and 150 other jurisdictions in the area that we have signed on with to provide a sort of a radiological detection rank around new york city. so we -- we're not able to say we're worried about that. it's a whole array of threats that are out there, and, you know, we don't see any diminishment of the threat. we see it as being constant and hasn't changed since after 9/11. >>> watch the entire discussion from this year's new york idea festival tonight on c-span. >>> next a look at the complicated relationship between the u.s. and russia and both countries approach's. speaker cnn foreign affairs reporter, and former foreign service officer john browne who served in moscow as well as eastern part of europe. it's hosted by the alpha foip alumni association. it's ninety minutes. >> great to see we have a full room. i think it's a good indicater for a robust discussion tonight on the topic of the rule of soft power in u.s.-russian relations. ting
we have work with the federal government. we have a program called securing the cities, and 150 other jurisdictions in the area that we have signed on with to provide a sort of a radiological detection rank around new york city. so we -- we're not able to say we're worried about that. it's a whole array of threats that are out there, and, you know, we don't see any diminishment of the threat. we see it as being constant and hasn't changed since after 9/11. >>> watch the entire...
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Jul 28, 2013
07/13
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hopefully diminishing government won't mind. or maybe will have to go to mars or mercury. i heard there's a lot of jobs and murky right now. it's like saskatchewan to they are like come on, we will take any refugee. the thing is that when we think about space travel and think about colonizing space, it may turn out to take a little longer than we think the we are kind of taking our first baby steps towards space travel. but let me just give you a quick example of how that timeline might work. looking back into human history, humans, 50,000 years ago used we did loads of much like this when you're seeing over here to get from asia to austria. 50,000 years ago. across an entire ocean. but it wasn't really until about 500 years ago that get international will using vote using a global culture it was not until really the advent of tremendous amounts of capital being poured into shipping as part of the colonization of the planet. that you really got, like i said, a global culture. so that's a lot of lag time between the first to use of boats to go from one continent to the othe
hopefully diminishing government won't mind. or maybe will have to go to mars or mercury. i heard there's a lot of jobs and murky right now. it's like saskatchewan to they are like come on, we will take any refugee. the thing is that when we think about space travel and think about colonizing space, it may turn out to take a little longer than we think the we are kind of taking our first baby steps towards space travel. but let me just give you a quick example of how that timeline might work....
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Jan 5, 2013
01/13
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they are watching sacramento reinvent very bad government. [applause] >> we have time for two more questions. right here? >> and you were coming, mr. speaker. i was really looking forward to you debating barack obama. [applause] [cheers] >> that would've been amazing. [applause] one of the things that was really noticeable and culpable in the last year of the presidential debates and the candidates was the lack of media objectivity. as a media person, would you suggest this next wave of television and bloggers in order to combat violence this mainstream or lame stream media that we have today? [applause] go back and look at the debates amah i did a fair amount of policing. you lose five out of six elections the popular vote. they got the minority vote in 2000. .. [applause] >> why
they are watching sacramento reinvent very bad government. [applause] >> we have time for two more questions. right here? >> and you were coming, mr. speaker. i was really looking forward to you debating barack obama. [applause] [cheers] >> that would've been amazing. [applause] one of the things that was really noticeable and culpable in the last year of the presidential debates and the candidates was the lack of media objectivity. as a media person, would you suggest this...
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Dec 21, 2013
12/13
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that was the duty of the government. >> former u.n. assistant secretary-general on the international inquiry he led into the assassination. >> coming in january in-depth with radio talk show most. he will take your questions for three hours beginning at noon eastern sunday, january 5th all part of book tv weekends on c-span2. and on-line we want to know what your favorite books were. join other readers click on book tv to enter the chat room. >> edwin black is next. he argues that tax exempt for otherwise publicly subsidized organizations and the new israel fund a working to block peace and reconciliation. this is about an hour and 20 minutes. >> this is my second appearance in congress on the subject of human rights. i will begin this briefing the same lab began my last for congress on the subject of eugenics. i come here not as a republican or democrat liberal or conservative but as a historian and investigative reporter who is concerned with human rights. it is because i make no political distinctions then come at it with an apoliti
that was the duty of the government. >> former u.n. assistant secretary-general on the international inquiry he led into the assassination. >> coming in january in-depth with radio talk show most. he will take your questions for three hours beginning at noon eastern sunday, january 5th all part of book tv weekends on c-span2. and on-line we want to know what your favorite books were. join other readers click on book tv to enter the chat room. >> edwin black is next. he argues...
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May 31, 2013
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we want manufacturing to pick up and we want to know what we are hearing from the government is true, and when it comes to trusting our government, while a lot of that has come to light recently and questions of whether we can trust if they say the wages are going to be better and if they say that there will be jobs produced can we trust that? one of the problems is for many years we have been told if there is no such thing as truth, what this does as lets people have the ability to lie without consequences. you look at the president and say he's a nice guy, sure people like him. but is he telling the truth? the point is when he says one thing, and the opposite comes out, you have to ask yourself is he trustworthy? so whether manufacturing will be increased related to the country and improving the economy, yes but the government does will have in fact. but again, there is such a thing as truth and lies. >> host: let's get eight response. >> guest: i think of manufacturing it's a good question because the president has done a lot of things which have received free support from the busi
we want manufacturing to pick up and we want to know what we are hearing from the government is true, and when it comes to trusting our government, while a lot of that has come to light recently and questions of whether we can trust if they say the wages are going to be better and if they say that there will be jobs produced can we trust that? one of the problems is for many years we have been told if there is no such thing as truth, what this does as lets people have the ability to lie without...
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Mar 2, 2013
03/13
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do you start with government. grassroots? i want to know you know what your thought is. >> it's both. >> it's both. >> thank you for that question. >> thank you for sharing that. i think we have another one. >> hi. i'm alissa. i was fortunate this summer to travel to india with the doctors we were there for two weeks and i think was struck the whole time by the amount of garbage in india. and i couldn't -- i would wake up in the morning and go to bed and i could not get over it. so my question is chow -- do we get anyone to care about their health when the first thing they need to care about or they probably care about is the dump of trash that just got put in front of their house in a slum or don't have running water. and to me that seems like the base. if we can't get that then we can't expect women to care about getting to school or anyone care about getting their children the right nutrition. i'm wondering through your travels what you have seen and your thoughts on that. >> my thought is you found your pig. and you shoul
do you start with government. grassroots? i want to know you know what your thought is. >> it's both. >> it's both. >> thank you for that question. >> thank you for sharing that. i think we have another one. >> hi. i'm alissa. i was fortunate this summer to travel to india with the doctors we were there for two weeks and i think was struck the whole time by the amount of garbage in india. and i couldn't -- i would wake up in the morning and go to bed and i could...
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Mar 30, 2013
03/13
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it's not going to affect government. it's going to affect everything. if you are asked where do you think computing is going to go? a person would have to honestly answer, it's not really the right question because by the year 2013 computers will have wormed their way into everything until they are almost invisible. so too, society now is going to learn from data. it's going to be data findings. we have to change the way that we approach things. the future is going to be based on information. the way that we have -- the way that we are driving cars is not because we can program a computer to drive a car. we tried that and it failed. it's because we can pour in a lot of data and left the statistics of the machine teach itself. the light is red, the light is green, accelerate. >> a member of the audience has pointed out that the internet searches and social network participants are not representative and this is just one example within a really large dataset by all the people in this room. all the dna generated by the complete genome generated by the nati
it's not going to affect government. it's going to affect everything. if you are asked where do you think computing is going to go? a person would have to honestly answer, it's not really the right question because by the year 2013 computers will have wormed their way into everything until they are almost invisible. so too, society now is going to learn from data. it's going to be data findings. we have to change the way that we approach things. the future is going to be based on information....
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Feb 21, 2013
02/13
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conservative intellectuals to remain focused on the need to win a majority of the american people and to govern. national radio throughout its existence and more so in his early years, the 50s and 60s very much need to bill buckley, managing editor, priscilla buckley and every other major person mayor acknowledged that they very much needed a man just like bill rusher to serve as a political eyes and errors, as a political counselor at the event between national review type people. as rusher tended to put it to me, the practical politicians. he didn't just mean people and are aspiring to public office, but people like his good friend, the master mind of the goldwater campaign, white two is a politician and rusher was somewhat of a politician. in other words, part titian or of actual politics. russia place tremendous value on these people and he was always trying, you know, with some success to get the more philosophical conservatives, classic example is buckley himself to appreciate that sort of career and not sort of after. i'm sure what you'll find in the book is a good deal of back and forth
conservative intellectuals to remain focused on the need to win a majority of the american people and to govern. national radio throughout its existence and more so in his early years, the 50s and 60s very much need to bill buckley, managing editor, priscilla buckley and every other major person mayor acknowledged that they very much needed a man just like bill rusher to serve as a political eyes and errors, as a political counselor at the event between national review type people. as rusher...
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Aug 15, 2013
08/13
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but the government, it's a great privilege and opportunity to serve. they had a succession of jobs and all of them had their tough moments, starting with my 2.5 years in world war ii. and there i was, fighting for my country. i didn't have much to do with it, but that was one person. i remember going to mg to my ofe and there was this big office building next to the white house. it used to be called the old state building. anyway, there was an office and when my father who died not too long after that, i took into my office. and i learned a lot about how you put the statistics together that we talk about all the time. so that was a great experience. then there was the secretary of labor. and i knew the subject matter very well and in the new department well because i had done some things in both the kennedy and johnson administrations that had given me exposure. but washington and politics and the press, all of these things. to come and be a press person. joe had worked for "the new york times" for a decade and he was the premier labor reporter anywher
but the government, it's a great privilege and opportunity to serve. they had a succession of jobs and all of them had their tough moments, starting with my 2.5 years in world war ii. and there i was, fighting for my country. i didn't have much to do with it, but that was one person. i remember going to mg to my ofe and there was this big office building next to the white house. it used to be called the old state building. anyway, there was an office and when my father who died not too long...
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Jul 21, 2013
07/13
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one is that it establish a strong central government or the new states. and it also had a religious liberty clause, and this clause was remarkable because it was the first clause of the first running in an anglo-american constitution included gender, so dickinson provided for the religious liberty of women. dickinson's quaker background played a significant role in all of his writings and all of his actions. dickinson was not a quaker but he was raised among quakers. he lived with quakers. is hold them you found was quaker. very strong quaker women informed his political three. and so when he advocated civil disobedience, he was advocating a quaker form of resistance. when he wrote the articles of confederation and included women, that was a very quick only thing to do because quakers at the time were the only religious groups who are allowed their women to speak publicly and to preach. quaker women traveled around the country and even the world reaching. and so dickinson wrote this liberty clause come and he started out by saying no person shall be elect
one is that it establish a strong central government or the new states. and it also had a religious liberty clause, and this clause was remarkable because it was the first clause of the first running in an anglo-american constitution included gender, so dickinson provided for the religious liberty of women. dickinson's quaker background played a significant role in all of his writings and all of his actions. dickinson was not a quaker but he was raised among quakers. he lived with quakers. is...
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Feb 6, 2013
02/13
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the government that joe tells us that we have been left with after two world wars, once the government gets large, it is mainly economic growth that provides fiscal revenues. the economy has approximately doubled in size by the time reagan was president. it grows with the economy. whether we go up a few percentage points were down a few percentage points, it is not the dominant source of revenue that is growth. today, so much has been given away for the future, that even the revenue growth has ardent been spent. that is starting the broad history, eating away at the revenues that we get. that affects all of the tax policy that we see during this period. one thing that i don't want to spend too much time on it, 1981 was the last of the major giveaways of this area of finance. most people think the 1981 defines the administration. but that was when they officially did the same thing. they had more tax cuts within a spending increase. one more item on the giveaway side. after that, how would we deal with things, the budget reform in 1986, they decided that they are going to try something
the government that joe tells us that we have been left with after two world wars, once the government gets large, it is mainly economic growth that provides fiscal revenues. the economy has approximately doubled in size by the time reagan was president. it grows with the economy. whether we go up a few percentage points were down a few percentage points, it is not the dominant source of revenue that is growth. today, so much has been given away for the future, that even the revenue growth has...
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Jan 4, 2013
01/13
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they look exactly at what government agencies are looking about you. and they have the manual that can see how much they give without a subpoena. you know, so it's really -- it's very interesting. because there are guidelines for the immigration service they can pretend to find out about other people on the microsecond question was on pushing us on the issue. can you repeat that second question? >> yes, the question was social media having been built in a direct democracy. >> yes, especially with women jump into the conversation. [laughter] >> okay, let's get through a bunch of them. >> you guys talked about what should be private, what shouldn't be private, how private shipping speed. a concerned that have is that things are too private and we have too much anonymity, it's easy for me to masquerade as someone else and cause problems for you because i can pretend i'm you. how do we address that? >> california has in each person nation law.. -- continually in cyberharassment cases. the mother of arrival would be a 16-year-old boy or a friend that is the
they look exactly at what government agencies are looking about you. and they have the manual that can see how much they give without a subpoena. you know, so it's really -- it's very interesting. because there are guidelines for the immigration service they can pretend to find out about other people on the microsecond question was on pushing us on the issue. can you repeat that second question? >> yes, the question was social media having been built in a direct democracy. >> yes,...
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Oct 18, 2013
10/13
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government shutdown. this is just over an hour. [applause] >> well, ladies and gentlemen, welcome to chatham house, thank you very very much. for joining us today. before anything else, let me be a little boring and as i said, secretary clinton, please make sure you don't have your mobil phones on. it would be a real shame to be beeping through this and it would be a shame also if you interfered with microphones and so on. please make sure you have them switched off. and far exit is that door there. i don't usually say it -- >> please don't walk out on me. [laughing] >> no early stepping out. you will be positive if that is done at all. so now let me just say it is my great honor to welcome hillary rodham clinton to chatham house. >> thank you. >> welcome to our institute. pleasure to welcome you here not just as a conversation with us but winner of the chatham house prize of 2013. >> thank you very much. [applause] >> i first say what i like about our prize, even though our board sometimes gets a little nervous, it is from a selec
government shutdown. this is just over an hour. [applause] >> well, ladies and gentlemen, welcome to chatham house, thank you very very much. for joining us today. before anything else, let me be a little boring and as i said, secretary clinton, please make sure you don't have your mobil phones on. it would be a real shame to be beeping through this and it would be a shame also if you interfered with microphones and so on. please make sure you have them switched off. and far exit is that...
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Nov 2, 2013
11/13
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the -- for the federal government. if i may begin with the threshold points that the sixth circuit recently made which is the claims they are and hearing all of these contraceptive coverage cases are asking the court to interpret rfra in a way that would disregard the corporate and the supreme court etc.. kashmir has made clear that the principle tenet that a shareholder is distinct from the corporation holds true and it has interpreted the federal rico statute in accordance with that back on common law principle. there are other examples that we have cited in our search petition. this is not a contested proposition so the question we have here is it a statutory interpretation and what to rfra do if the congress enacted in 1993? >> it defines persons as corporations. >> unless the context indicates otherwise in the language of rfra is persons exercise of religion so when you say the claim is by regulating the fresh way foods corp. and that would be any form of regulation that is tantamount to personally burdening frank
the -- for the federal government. if i may begin with the threshold points that the sixth circuit recently made which is the claims they are and hearing all of these contraceptive coverage cases are asking the court to interpret rfra in a way that would disregard the corporate and the supreme court etc.. kashmir has made clear that the principle tenet that a shareholder is distinct from the corporation holds true and it has interpreted the federal rico statute in accordance with that back on...
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Sep 21, 2013
09/13
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i joined the government, the reagan administration. so america, in a sense, gave me the chance to write the script of my own life. and i think that's the intoxicating appeal of america to outsiders, is it--it--it's a country that's sort of like a blank sheet of paper and you are the artist, and you get to create your own destiny instead of having it given to you. c-span: middle class in india vs. middle class in the united states--what's the difference in--in just living? >> guest: the middle class in india, like so many middle classes, is essentially defined by the triumph of the struggle against necessity. and that means you're middle class, basically, if you don't have to worry where your next meal is coming from, and you're middle class if you have a roof over your head, and you're middle class if you don't have to worry that your children will have a--get a disease and die and so on. so it's--the ability to triumph over grinding necessity defines the middle class in india. now obviously, the middle class here lives in considerably
i joined the government, the reagan administration. so america, in a sense, gave me the chance to write the script of my own life. and i think that's the intoxicating appeal of america to outsiders, is it--it--it's a country that's sort of like a blank sheet of paper and you are the artist, and you get to create your own destiny instead of having it given to you. c-span: middle class in india vs. middle class in the united states--what's the difference in--in just living? >> guest: the...
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Aug 10, 2013
08/13
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c-span: which was a half-government, half-private... >> guest: half government, half private. and yet he maintained his role as publisher. i think that's really not what anybody could dream of doing these days. and before that, he was heavily involved in politics and involved with lyndon johnson and involved, as you said, with little rock and involved, actually--i tell a story about desegregation of the--of the swimming pools in washington, which he kept the story out of the paper and made a deal with this interior department that if he quieted the story of a riot that had taken place about swimming pools, that they would desegregate them. well, that was using the paper and--and influencing the news. and i think that's unacceptable these days and--because you have to influence events by telling--giving people information by which they can make decisions. and so i think it wouldn't happen today. c-span: you wrote--on page 140, you said, 'it wasn't until years later that i looked at the downside of all this and realized that, perversely, i had seemed to enjoy the role of doormat
c-span: which was a half-government, half-private... >> guest: half government, half private. and yet he maintained his role as publisher. i think that's really not what anybody could dream of doing these days. and before that, he was heavily involved in politics and involved with lyndon johnson and involved, as you said, with little rock and involved, actually--i tell a story about desegregation of the--of the swimming pools in washington, which he kept the story out of the paper and...
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Apr 8, 2013
04/13
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., government accountability office, a government watchdog agency. and it informs us that climate disruption and the increased frequency and intensity of extreme western events lik weate sandy, threaten our nation's financial security. sandy was $60 billion, $70 billion, $80 billion, that we stepped up to the plate and helped, as we should have. we can't keep doing this. we are struggling to get this economy on track. and then i also spoke about another aspect, which is the effect of too much carbon in the air on public health. today i want to talk about another issue that i find kind of intriguing because whenever i try to bring the subject up to clerkcolleagues, except for ther so of us that really care about this, they say something like, well, it's ry ridiculous for uso work first. what's the point of us taking the lead? that is an insulting argument to america. i don't want to wait for china to take the lead on anything because they don't share our values. we don't wait for china to act on issues like human rights before we protect human rights.
., government accountability office, a government watchdog agency. and it informs us that climate disruption and the increased frequency and intensity of extreme western events lik weate sandy, threaten our nation's financial security. sandy was $60 billion, $70 billion, $80 billion, that we stepped up to the plate and helped, as we should have. we can't keep doing this. we are struggling to get this economy on track. and then i also spoke about another aspect, which is the effect of too much...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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conservative intellectuals to remain focused on the need to win a majority of the american people and to govern. "national review" as a magazine for about its existence, and probably even more so in its years in the 50's and 60's very much needed bill buckley managing editor priscilla and every other major person there acknowledged they very much need a man like bill rusher to serve as a political ideas and the years as a political counselor, has a link between "national review" type of people as he tended to put it the intellectuals and the practical politicians come he didn't just mean people aspiring to public office, but people like his good friend the mastermind of the campaign and the wall marshall of the campaign. he too was a politician and rusher was somewhat of a practitioner of actual politics. he placed a tremendous value on these people, and he was always trying with some success to get the more philosophical conservatives a classic example of course being buckley himself to appreciate that sort of career, that serve individual and that sort of effort. a lot of what you'll find in
conservative intellectuals to remain focused on the need to win a majority of the american people and to govern. "national review" as a magazine for about its existence, and probably even more so in its years in the 50's and 60's very much needed bill buckley managing editor priscilla and every other major person there acknowledged they very much need a man like bill rusher to serve as a political ideas and the years as a political counselor, has a link between "national...
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Jan 6, 2013
01/13
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this model, government -- government's job is not to support families economically, but to prevent them from experiencing or from coming into contact with an immoral society. something like, i mean, take the example of reproductive rights or abortion, perhaps the most critical example. for many conservatives, this is simply an immoral process, an immoral act, and government's job should be to prevent it, and that -- that is a legitimate role for government as conservatives see it. the reason the 1960s is so important to the story is it looks a little like this. if you think about the liberal politicians, the notable liberal politicians of that earlier era, someone like franklin roosevelt, kennedy, lyndon johnson, these were political figures who believed in what we now would call the traditional family. they believed in a male breadwinner family, largely the male -- largely the male responsible for supporting the family economically and so on. that was really still part of the liberal idea, and that idea was challenged in the 60s, particularly by feminism and by the gay and lesbian righ
this model, government -- government's job is not to support families economically, but to prevent them from experiencing or from coming into contact with an immoral society. something like, i mean, take the example of reproductive rights or abortion, perhaps the most critical example. for many conservatives, this is simply an immoral process, an immoral act, and government's job should be to prevent it, and that -- that is a legitimate role for government as conservatives see it. the reason...
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Aug 31, 2013
08/13
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there is a chasm between the masses of the middle east and the governments of the middle east. many of these governments have been terribly discredited, delegitimized by their close relations with britain and france. this became the presence for us, we want to work collaborative of the leaders of these countries if they don't represent the people what about the relationship to the united states and the people of these countries is something that over the decades we never successfully resolved. in conclusion i would be remiss if i didn't mention to you one of our favorite figures in the roosevelt period, one of roosevelt's chief antagonists who was not a member of the axis alliance, charles vidal. he created for roosevelt and winston churchill traffic headaches in the middle east. in 1941, the british and the free french decided to jointly invade syria and lebanon and overthrow the regime there and their arab collaborators. when we went in in july '41, the americans said it would be nice to make a pledge prior to this that syria and lebanon will be free. the anglo free french in
there is a chasm between the masses of the middle east and the governments of the middle east. many of these governments have been terribly discredited, delegitimized by their close relations with britain and france. this became the presence for us, we want to work collaborative of the leaders of these countries if they don't represent the people what about the relationship to the united states and the people of these countries is something that over the decades we never successfully resolved....
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Nov 29, 2013
11/13
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the law that governs her isn't trustworthy. she is supposed to stay at home and be quite while her husband runs around with a french prostitute. that moment when she is in a position of hell and undergoing the moment that all radicals undergo. she is angry. one of the things i try to figure out and answer in the book is why it is that people in positions of power fail to understand the significance of anger. why don't we under just what a powerful emotion it is for people who appear to be on the outside and appear to have no obvious resources to hold in their hearts. i have a chapter in the book about the troubles in northern ireland. i went and spent a good summer in bell fast. not something i would recommend anything doing. but i went to a meeting held in a catholic neighborhood and it was to remember the murphy massacre when british troops opened fire on a group of catholic civilians. and no one thinks about the massacre in england. they have moved on. they are not dwelling on it. they are worried about other things. if you
the law that governs her isn't trustworthy. she is supposed to stay at home and be quite while her husband runs around with a french prostitute. that moment when she is in a position of hell and undergoing the moment that all radicals undergo. she is angry. one of the things i try to figure out and answer in the book is why it is that people in positions of power fail to understand the significance of anger. why don't we under just what a powerful emotion it is for people who appear to be on...
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Oct 19, 2013
10/13
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i mean, you know, if you have failed government, and you shut down the government like what happened here, i mean, see the rating of congress in this country. i know. i think the same situation, you know, really the popularity of the coalition has to do the ability to address the challenges i mentioned. to provide -- and deliver on its stated objective which is overthrow the regime and create that. it i would say that would go up-and-down. in some cases when they're able to do deliver i would say yes. , you have support. sometimes when you don't, people again come and say why should i support you? so far i don't think anybody is calling for the creation of an alternative institution. i would say again immediately if we're able to improve the question of in celebrated areas that should reflect positively on the -- popularity. i want to touch on some things on that you alluded to earlier. i was wondering for you could dig a little deeper to concrete measures that you might be taking. there's been a recent wave of pub anones enunciation -- including some previously affiliated. it's not
i mean, you know, if you have failed government, and you shut down the government like what happened here, i mean, see the rating of congress in this country. i know. i think the same situation, you know, really the popularity of the coalition has to do the ability to address the challenges i mentioned. to provide -- and deliver on its stated objective which is overthrow the regime and create that. it i would say that would go up-and-down. in some cases when they're able to do deliver i would...
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Jan 26, 2013
01/13
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their fellow activists to remain focused on the need to win a majority of the american people and to govern. "national review" as a very intellectual magazines throughout its existence, and probably even more so in its early years in the 50s and 60s, very much needed -- bill buckley, managing editor priscilla buckley and every other major person they're acknowledged that they very much needed a man just like william rusher to serve as political eyes and ears, as political counselor, as a link between national review type people as william rusher put it to me the intellectuals and the practical politicians, by politicians he did not just mean people in or aspiring to public office but people like his good friend f. clifton white, mastermind of the draft will water campaign and marshall of the old water campaign, white too with a politician and william rusher was something of a politician, a practitioner of act will politics. william rusher please tremendous value on these people. and he was always trying with some success to get a more philosophical conservatives. classic example, buckley hi
their fellow activists to remain focused on the need to win a majority of the american people and to govern. "national review" as a very intellectual magazines throughout its existence, and probably even more so in its early years in the 50s and 60s, very much needed -- bill buckley, managing editor priscilla buckley and every other major person they're acknowledged that they very much needed a man just like william rusher to serve as political eyes and ears, as political counselor,...
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Feb 10, 2013
02/13
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not government agencies but people in their garages. i thought that would be a really cool idea. you get entrepreneurs building spaceships and prove the government agencies they can do it better, cheaper, faster, and that's when entrepreneurship is about. that's how we became title sponsors of the prize, a $10 million prize for private companies to build spaceships and go to space, and in 2004 an american aero space legendary engineer,' bruttan, won the prize, and his space ship one, which won the x prize in the air and space museum right above i apollo 11, so everytime i go there i'm very proud to say, i had something to do with that. and because he won the prize, the paradigm shift happened and through my involvement with x5, i detoured back into hi path to my flight to space, and ended up in russia, training as a backup, and when i was there, i had no idea that i would get a chance tofully to space. i was just given an opportunity to go and train. and a lot of people may have said, well, why should i spend six months in the cold winter of moscow, and just go there for no appar
not government agencies but people in their garages. i thought that would be a really cool idea. you get entrepreneurs building spaceships and prove the government agencies they can do it better, cheaper, faster, and that's when entrepreneurship is about. that's how we became title sponsors of the prize, a $10 million prize for private companies to build spaceships and go to space, and in 2004 an american aero space legendary engineer,' bruttan, won the prize, and his space ship one, which won...
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May 1, 2013
05/13
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it's not going it effect government or health care. it's going to effect everything. it's like computing the 19 50s if you think computing is going to go next? what industries will be useful the person would have to honestly answer it's not the right question. because by the year 2013, computers will have wormed their way to everything until they are almost invisible. it's going learn from data and be data fying things and learning from big data. the way we have self-depriving cars is not because we can computer program a compute per chemical weapon pour in a lot of data and let the statistics and the machine teach itself. where not a presentive. it's one example, large data like the dna of people in the room. all the dna generated by the complete genome and the new national cancerth. we're talk abouting our large complex data. you can't look tat and in the next excel spread sheet probably data. if big data is about correlation and not cause, how can you judge . >> i think to it's important unthe limitation of big data. the limitation of data that you collect. otherwi
it's not going it effect government or health care. it's going to effect everything. it's like computing the 19 50s if you think computing is going to go next? what industries will be useful the person would have to honestly answer it's not the right question. because by the year 2013, computers will have wormed their way to everything until they are almost invisible. it's going learn from data and be data fying things and learning from big data. the way we have self-depriving cars is not...
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Oct 10, 2013
10/13
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it talks about this government shutdown. he reflected on the fact that we literally have families come, the families who in the last few days had that awful knock on the door where they were told that their son had died in service to this country in the united states military. five over the weekend and i understand 17 during the course of this government shutdown and sadly the support which we always give to these families is not fair. it's not there. customarily within 24 to 36 hours they are given a sum of money in advance on the benefits that soldier turned so they can take your funeral expenses and the obvious needs of their families. we can't do that because the government is shut down. an awful knock on the door was not followed by the consolation of this government helping these families. and the offer to many of these families an opportunity to come and to be there to welcome at dover elf -- air force base the return of their fallen hero. we can't offer them that and if it does the government is shut down. dr. blacks
it talks about this government shutdown. he reflected on the fact that we literally have families come, the families who in the last few days had that awful knock on the door where they were told that their son had died in service to this country in the united states military. five over the weekend and i understand 17 during the course of this government shutdown and sadly the support which we always give to these families is not fair. it's not there. customarily within 24 to 36 hours they are...
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Apr 20, 2013
04/13
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without government, been very successful for years without a real government. but sometimes you need -- germany is expressing this, you may have known that -- not a wrong decision -- if you look at that greg, the highest growth we ever had. 70%, which is really high, i suppose, said, yes, we have to solve the problems. thank you very much. >> thank you very much. [applause] is more coordination needed between the two of us, and if so, how would you recommend we achieve that? i think we try to find solutions for europe, even though -- but we will work to discuss -- it's not most problematic. it's not some most problematic to have a common understanding in the financial sector. nevertheless, even in financial regulations, you can suffer what is normally in history, as soon as you have some progress or some more -- the last crisis is far away, so less ambitious, is to ongoing seek reforms. what i tell to my european colleagues, again and again, if we have another crisis like the crisis suffered in 2008, my concern isn't europe. i don't know about the situation in
without government, been very successful for years without a real government. but sometimes you need -- germany is expressing this, you may have known that -- not a wrong decision -- if you look at that greg, the highest growth we ever had. 70%, which is really high, i suppose, said, yes, we have to solve the problems. thank you very much. >> thank you very much. [applause] is more coordination needed between the two of us, and if so, how would you recommend we achieve that? i think we...
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Jan 20, 2013
01/13
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rusher was not as libertarian or small government as frank meyer, but in general the two of them lined up. i'm sorry? >> what about priscilla buckley? >> i simply don't know about that. what is perfectly clear is that she and burnham were very close in professional sense. their personalities were just meshed together really well. they were both very calm people. they both believed in a very high literary quality for the magazine. and in keeping things that just didn't measure up intellectually or might be too extreme, out of the magazine. rusher was a little more accommodating to the hard right in that respect. i'm unaware, though, that there was any real conflict between priscilla buckley, the manager edit for about the same period, 30 years or are so,light 50s to mid-80s -- that rusher was there. they overlapped substantially. everyone liked her. everybody respected her, so she wasn't really involved in personal conflicts there was a terrible personal conflict between burnham and meyer. ideological conflict as well. but neither of them ever quit, which is to their credit. i can do mo
rusher was not as libertarian or small government as frank meyer, but in general the two of them lined up. i'm sorry? >> what about priscilla buckley? >> i simply don't know about that. what is perfectly clear is that she and burnham were very close in professional sense. their personalities were just meshed together really well. they were both very calm people. they both believed in a very high literary quality for the magazine. and in keeping things that just didn't measure up...
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Mar 5, 2013
03/13
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CSPAN2
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that conversation was occurring to all sectors of government. everybody anticipating we're going to fix this problem one way or the other, and so the demand for planning associated with that seem to be second priority in terms of getting to a level of detail. certainly never high level thoughts that were being considered what and where things might be impacted, the detailed planning and detailed analysis did not occur, start occurring until early this calendar year when it became apparent that this situation is likely not to be avoided. >> so at that time was any consideration given to the execution of operation maintenance efforts within dod? and if that's the case at what point where those resources we strain him and wouldn't that have an impact on the third and fourth quarters? >> yes, there was an immediate consideration about allocation of reductions, certainly with the president's authority to exempt military personnel. it became very apparent that the impacts any other accounts would be larger and certainly with a priority to protect war
that conversation was occurring to all sectors of government. everybody anticipating we're going to fix this problem one way or the other, and so the demand for planning associated with that seem to be second priority in terms of getting to a level of detail. certainly never high level thoughts that were being considered what and where things might be impacted, the detailed planning and detailed analysis did not occur, start occurring until early this calendar year when it became apparent that...
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Aug 6, 2013
08/13
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-- working with the government were you confused? >> no. most people in the government you can be friends with people but it you remember what comes first sometimes the paper attacks the friends are he thought were friends or sometimes you can reason but mostly you just have to stand by it. >>c-span: when you travel talking to people you lived in sioux falls? and chicago, said francisco, where else? >> guest: not much. mostly washington. >>c-span: people and get the post and washington and they are cynical of the power and control and how would you tell them about the people that are away from here that you do not have too much power? >> guest: i tried to explain the paper of a magazine or a television or magazine are for instance "the post" has the power to inform people and if they cover it well, it matters because you talk to the government as well as people in washington. but sometimes people thank you go upstairs to talk to the editors. you don't. i mean about a story you don't see the story before they get in the paper. you hav
-- working with the government were you confused? >> no. most people in the government you can be friends with people but it you remember what comes first sometimes the paper attacks the friends are he thought were friends or sometimes you can reason but mostly you just have to stand by it. >>c-span: when you travel talking to people you lived in sioux falls? and chicago, said francisco, where else? >> guest: not much. mostly washington. >>c-span: people and get the post...